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Dive into the research topics where Brian P. Hudson is active.

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Featured researches published by Brian P. Hudson.


Cell | 2005

Inhibition of bacterial RNA polymerase by streptolydigin: stabilization of a straight-bridge-helix active-center conformation.

Steven Tuske; Stefan G. Sarafianos; Xinyue Wang; Brian P. Hudson; Elena Sineva; Jayanta Mukhopadhyay; Jens J. Birktoft; Olivier Leroy; Sajida Ismail; Arthur D. Clark; Chhaya Dharia; Andrew A. Napoli; Oleg Laptenko; Jookyung Lee; Sergei Borukhov; Richard H. Ebright; Eddy Arnold

We define the target, mechanism, and structural basis of inhibition of bacterial RNA polymerase (RNAP) by the tetramic acid antibiotic streptolydigin (Stl). Stl binds to a site adjacent to but not overlapping the RNAP active center and stabilizes an RNAP-active-center conformational state with a straight-bridge helix. The results provide direct support for the proposals that alternative straight-bridge-helix and bent-bridge-helix RNAP-active-center conformations exist and that cycling between straight-bridge-helix and bent-bridge-helix RNAP-active-center conformations is required for RNAP function. The results set bounds on models for RNAP function and suggest strategies for design of novel antibacterial agents.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

The RCSB protein data bank: integrative view of protein, gene and 3D structural information

Peter W. Rose; Andreas Prlić; Ali Altunkaya; Chunxiao Bi; Anthony R. Bradley; Cole Christie; Luigi Di Costanzo; Jose M. Duarte; Shuchismita Dutta; Zukang Feng; Rachel Kramer Green; David S. Goodsell; Brian P. Hudson; Tara Kalro; Robert Lowe; Ezra Peisach; Christopher Randle; Alexander S. Rose; Chenghua Shao; Yi-Ping Tao; Yana Valasatava; Maria Voigt; John D. Westbrook; Jesse Woo; Huangwang Yang; Jasmine Young; Christine Zardecki; Helen M. Berman; Stephen K. Burley

The Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatics Protein Data Bank (RCSB PDB, http://rcsb.org), the US data center for the global PDB archive, makes PDB data freely available to all users, from structural biologists to computational biologists and beyond. New tools and resources have been added to the RCSB PDB web portal in support of a ‘Structural View of Biology.’ Recent developments have improved the User experience, including the high-speed NGL Viewer that provides 3D molecular visualization in any web browser, improved support for data file download and enhanced organization of website pages for query, reporting and individual structure exploration. Structure validation information is now visible for all archival entries. PDB data have been integrated with external biological resources, including chromosomal position within the human genome; protein modifications; and metabolic pathways. PDB-101 educational materials have been reorganized into a searchable website and expanded to include new features such as the Geis Digital Archive.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2009

Structures of RNA polymerase–antibiotic complexes

Mary X Ho; Brian P. Hudson; Kalyan Das; Eddy Arnold; Richard H. Ebright

Inhibition of bacterial RNA polymerase (RNAP) is an established strategy for antituberculosis therapy and broad-spectrum antibacterial therapy. Crystal structures of RNAP-inhibitor complexes are available for four classes of antibiotics: rifamycins, sorangicin, streptolydigin, and myxopyronin. The structures define three different targets, and three different mechanisms, for inhibition of bacterial RNAP: (1) rifamycins and sorangicin bind near the RNAP active center and block extension of RNA products; (2) streptolydigin interacts with a target that overlaps the RNAP active center and inhibits conformational cycling of the RNAP active center; and (3) myxopyronin interacts with a target remote from the RNAP active center and functions by interfering with opening of the RNAP active-center cleft to permit entry and unwinding of DNA and/or by interfering with interactions between RNAP and the DNA template strand. The structures enable construction of homology models of pathogen RNAP-antibiotic complexes, enable in silico screening for new antibacterial agents, and enable rational design of improved antibacterial agents.


FEBS Letters | 2013

Trendspotting in the Protein Data Bank.

Helen M. Berman; Buvaneswari Coimbatore Narayanan; Luigi Di Costanzo; Shuchismita Dutta; Sutapa Ghosh; Brian P. Hudson; Catherine L. Lawson; Ezra Peisach; Andreas Prlić; Peter W. Rose; Chenghua Shao; Huanwang Yang; Jasmine Young; Christine Zardecki

The Protein Data Bank (PDB) was established in 1971 as a repository for the three dimensional structures of biological macromolecules. Since then, more than 85 000 biological macromolecule structures have been determined and made available in the PDB archive. Through analysis of the corpus of data, it is possible to identify trends that can be used to inform us abou the future of structural biology and to plan the best ways to improve the management of the ever‐growing amount of PDB data.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Three-dimensional EM structure of an intact activator-dependent transcription initiation complex

Brian P. Hudson; Joel Quispe; Samuel Lara-González; Younggyu Kim; Helen M. Berman; Eddy Arnold; Richard H. Ebright; Catherine L. Lawson

We present the experimentally determined 3D structure of an intact activator-dependent transcription initiation complex comprising the Escherichia coli catabolite activator protein (CAP), RNA polymerase holoenzyme (RNAP), and a DNA fragment containing positions −78 to +20 of a Class I CAP-dependent promoter with a CAP site at position −61.5 and a premelted transcription bubble. A 20-Å electron microscopy reconstruction was obtained by iterative projection-based matching of single particles visualized in carbon-sandwich negative stain and was fitted using atomic coordinate sets for CAP, RNAP, and DNA. The structure defines the organization of a Class I CAP-RNAP-promoter complex and supports previously proposed interactions of CAP with RNAP α subunit C-terminal domain (αCTD), interactions of αCTD with σ70 region 4, interactions of CAP and RNAP with promoter DNA, and phased-DNA-bend-dependent partial wrapping of DNA around the complex. The structure also reveals the positions and shapes of species-specific domains within the RNAP β′, β, and σ70 subunits.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

EMDataBank unified data resource for 3DEM.

Catherine L. Lawson; Ardan Patwardhan; Matthew L. Baker; Corey F. Hryc; Eduardo Sanz García; Brian P. Hudson; Ingvar Lagerstedt; Steven J. Ludtke; Grigore Pintilie; Raul Sala; John D. Westbrook; Helen M. Berman; Gerard J. Kleywegt; Wah Chiu

Three-dimensional Electron Microscopy (3DEM) has become a key experimental method in structural biology for a broad spectrum of biological specimens from molecules to cells. The EMDataBank project provides a unified portal for deposition, retrieval and analysis of 3DEM density maps, atomic models and associated metadata (emdatabank.org). We provide here an overview of the rapidly growing 3DEM structural data archives, which include maps in EM Data Bank and map-derived models in the Protein Data Bank. In addition, we describe progress and approaches toward development of validation protocols and methods, working with the scientific community, in order to create a validation pipeline for 3DEM data.


Structure | 2017

OneDep: Unified wwPDB System for Deposition, Biocuration, and Validation of Macromolecular Structures in the PDB Archive

Jasmine Young; John D. Westbrook; Zukang Feng; Raul Sala; Ezra Peisach; Thomas J. Oldfield; Sanchayita Sen; Aleksandras Gutmanas; David R. Armstrong; John M. Berrisford; Li Chen; Minyu Chen; Luigi Di Costanzo; Dimitris Dimitropoulos; Guanghua Gao; Sutapa Ghosh; Swanand Gore; Vladimir Guranovic; Pieter M. S. Hendrickx; Brian P. Hudson; Reiko Igarashi; Yasuyo Ikegawa; Naohiro Kobayashi; Catherine L. Lawson; Yuhe Liang; Steve Mading; Lora Mak; M. Saqib Mir; Abhik Mukhopadhyay; Ardan Patwardhan

OneDep, a unified system for deposition, biocuration, and validation of experimentally determined structures of biological macromolecules to the PDB archive, has been developed as a global collaboration by the worldwide PDB (wwPDB) partners. This new system was designed to ensure that the wwPDB could meet the evolving archiving requirements of the scientific community over the coming decades. OneDep unifies deposition, biocuration, and validation pipelines across all wwPDB, EMDB, and BMRB deposition sites with improved focus on data quality and completeness in these archives, while supporting growth in the number of depositions and increases in their average size and complexity. In this paper, we describe the design, functional operation, and supporting infrastructure of the OneDep system, and provide initial performance assessments.


Structure | 2017

Validation of Structures in the Protein Data Bank

Swanand Gore; Eduardo Sanz García; Pieter M. S. Hendrickx; Aleksandras Gutmanas; John D. Westbrook; Huanwang Yang; Zukang Feng; Kumaran Baskaran; John M. Berrisford; Brian P. Hudson; Yasuyo Ikegawa; Naohiro Kobayashi; Catherine L. Lawson; Steve Mading; Lora Mak; Abhik Mukhopadhyay; Thomas J. Oldfield; Ardan Patwardhan; Ezra Peisach; Gaurav Sahni; Monica Sekharan; Sanchayita Sen; Chenghua Shao; Oliver S. Smart; Eldon L. Ulrich; Reiko Yamashita; Martha Quesada; Jasmine Young; Haruki Nakamura; John L. Markley

Summary The Worldwide PDB recently launched a deposition, biocuration, and validation tool: OneDep. At various stages of OneDep data processing, validation reports for three-dimensional structures of biological macromolecules are produced. These reports are based on recommendations of expert task forces representing crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance, and cryoelectron microscopy communities. The reports provide useful metrics with which depositors can evaluate the quality of the experimental data, the structural model, and the fit between them. The validation module is also available as a stand-alone web server and as a programmatically accessible web service. A growing number of journals require the official wwPDB validation reports (produced at biocuration) to accompany manuscripts describing macromolecular structures. Upon public release of the structure, the validation report becomes part of the public PDB archive. Geometric quality scores for proteins in the PDB archive have improved over the past decade.


Database | 2014

Small molecule annotation for the Protein Data Bank

Sanchayita Sen; Jasmine Young; John M. Berrisford; Minyu Chen; Matthew J. Conroy; Shuchismita Dutta; Luigi Di Costanzo; Guanghua Gao; Sutapa Ghosh; Brian P. Hudson; Reiko Igarashi; Yumiko Kengaku; Yuhe Liang; Ezra Peisach; Irina Persikova; Abhik Mukhopadhyay; Buvaneswari Coimbatore Narayanan; Gaurav Sahni; Junko Sato; Monica Sekharan; Chenghua Shao; Lihua Tan; Marina Zhuravleva

The Protein Data Bank (PDB) is the single global repository for three-dimensional structures of biological macromolecules and their complexes, and its more than 100 000 structures contain more than 20 000 distinct ligands or small molecules bound to proteins and nucleic acids. Information about these small molecules and their interactions with proteins and nucleic acids is crucial for our understanding of biochemical processes and vital for structure-based drug design. Small molecules present in a deposited structure may be attached to a polymer or may occur as a separate, non-covalently linked ligand. During curation of a newly deposited structure by wwPDB annotation staff, each molecule is cross-referenced to the PDB Chemical Component Dictionary (CCD). If the molecule is new to the PDB, a dictionary description is created for it. The information about all small molecule components found in the PDB is distributed via the ftp archive as an external reference file. Small molecule annotation in the PDB also includes information about ligand-binding sites and about covalent and other linkages between ligands and macromolecules. During the remediation of the peptide-like antibiotics and inhibitors present in the PDB archive in 2011, it became clear that additional annotation was required for consistent representation of these molecules, which are quite often composed of several sequential subcomponents including modified amino acids and other chemical groups. The connectivity information of the modified amino acids is necessary for correct representation of these biologically interesting molecules. The combined information is made available via a new resource called the Biologically Interesting molecules Reference Dictionary, which is complementary to the CCD and is now routinely used for annotation of peptide-like antibiotics and inhibitors.


Database | 2018

Worldwide Protein Data Bank biocuration supporting open access to high-quality 3D structural biology data

Jasmine Young; John D. Westbrook; Zukang Feng; Ezra Peisach; Irina Persikova; Raul Sala; Sanchayita Sen; John M. Berrisford; Jawahar Swaminathan; Thomas J. Oldfield; Aleksandras Gutmanas; Reiko Igarashi; David R. Armstrong; Kumaran Baskaran; Li Chen; Minyu Chen; Alice R. Clark; Luigi Di Costanzo; Dimitris Dimitropoulos; Guanghua Gao; Sutapa Ghosh; Swanand Gore; Vladimir Guranovic; Pieter M. S. Hendrickx; Brian P. Hudson; Yasuyo Ikegawa; Yumiko Kengaku; Catherine L. Lawson; Yuhe Liang; Lora Mak

Abstract The Protein Data Bank (PDB) is the single global repository for experimentally determined 3D structures of biological macromolecules and their complexes with ligands. The worldwide PDB (wwPDB) is the international collaboration that manages the PDB archive according to the FAIR principles: Findability, Accessibility, Interoperability and Reusability. The wwPDB recently developed OneDep, a unified tool for deposition, validation and biocuration of structures of biological macromolecules. All data deposited to the PDB undergo critical review by wwPDB Biocurators. This article outlines the importance of biocuration for structural biology data deposited to the PDB and describes wwPDB biocuration processes and the role of expert Biocurators in sustaining a high-quality archive. Structural data submitted to the PDB are examined for self-consistency, standardized using controlled vocabularies, cross-referenced with other biological data resources and validated for scientific/technical accuracy. We illustrate how biocuration is integral to PDB data archiving, as it facilitates accurate, consistent and comprehensive representation of biological structure data, allowing efficient and effective usage by research scientists, educators, students and the curious public worldwide. Database URL: https://www.wwpdb.org/

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